4.3 Article

Dirty work: well-intentioned mental health workers cannot ameliorate harms in offshore detention

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ETHICS
Volume 49, Issue 8, Pages 563-568

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jme-2022-108348

Keywords

human Rights; prisoners; ethics- medical; health personnel; mental health

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This article analyzes the ethical issues faced by mental health service providers working in Australian immigration detention centers, pointing out the harms caused by supporting a system that perpetuates human suffering. The article calls for organizations to oppose the employment of their associates in offshore detention centers and provides directions for scrutiny and consideration.
Professional providers of mental health services are motivated to help people, including, or especially, vulnerable people. We analyse the ethical implications of mental health providers accepting employment at detention centres that operate out of the normal regulatory structure of the modern state. Specifically, we examine tensions and moral harms experienced by providers at the Australian immigration detention centre on the island of Nauru. Australia has adopted indefinite offshore detention for asylum-seekers arriving by boat as part of a deterrence strategy that relies on making detainment conditions harsh. This has known deleterious mental health effects. As a token to fiduciary care obligations, Australia employs mental health professionals to work on Nauru. These providers are often motivated to make a positive difference for detainees' lives. We examine the overall impact of the providers' work with detainees and the implications of their presence. The strongest evidence supports that the small mitigation of harms offered by these providers does not outweigh the harms of supporting a system designed to perpetuate human suffering. For mental health professionals considering working in offshore detention, we offer specific topics to scrutinise and weigh prior to employment. Because optimising detainee's mental health is beyond the capacity of individual providers, we call for the organisations standardising and supporting mental health professionals to oppose employment of their associates in offshore detention. Lessons from this case study are generalisable to other jurisdictions to help inform organisations that licence and support mental health providers and individual providers considering work in similar settings.

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